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Tags: Endangered, Animals, Save, Snow, Leopards 

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Kara Asumie
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Nine-tailed Neko

PostPosted: Sat Apr 11, 2009 4:28 pm


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These beautiful Pictures of the Panda were taken by Peterbillelarsen off of Deviantart.com

The Gaint Panda
Status: Endangered
1960's - 1990: Rare
1990 - 1994: Endangered
1996 - 2004: Endangered

Profile:
The giant panda weighs 70 - 125 kg (154 - 275 lb). It occupies montane forests with dense stands of bamboo at altitudes of 2700 - 3900 m (8850 - 12,800'). The panda does not hibernate but descends to lower elevations in the winter (usually not lower than 800 m (2600')) to reach warmer temperatures. It does not make a permanent den but takes shelter in hollow trees, rock crevices and caves. Although it is predominantly terrestrial. the giant panda can climb trees well. Activity patterns are largely crepuscular and nocturnal. Ten to twelve hours a day are spent feeding, mainly on bamboo (which comprises 99 % of its diet). Giant pandas are usually solitary, except during the mating season.

The giant panda has been declining for thousands of years due to hunting by humans and climatic changes. Its populations originally extended throughout most of southern and eastern China, northern Myanmar, and northern Vietnam. By 1900, it occurred only in the Qinling Mountains and along the edge of the Tibetan plateau. Soon after 1900, the expansion of agriculture upstream along principal river valleys separated this distribution into separate regions in six mountain ranges. Currently, the giant panda occurs in portions of these six mountain ranges in China's Gansu, Shaanxi and Sichuan Provinces.

The greatest threat to panda survival is the loss and degradation of its habitat. The giant panda's range is steadily shrinking as logging operations - many of them illegal - fell trees, and peasants clear land for farming or harvest vegetation for fuel. Already panda populations are small and isolated, confined to high ridges and hemmed in by cultivation. Poaching was a serious problem in the past, but it has dropped off, and it is no longer considered a major problem in substantial portions of the range. Furthermore, pandas' body parts have not been sought for use in traditional Chinese medicine. Giant pandas are killed, however, as victims of poachers' snares set for musk deer. An indirect threat from habitat fragmentation relates to the panda's reliance on bamboo for food. This threat arises because bamboo stands are subject to periodic large-scale die-offs. In the past, when bamboo died off, pandas could migrate to areas with healthy bamboo. But with fragmented habitat, this may not be possible.

Tidbits:
*** The giant panda’s diet specialization is very unusual in mammals. Only a handful of animals are predominantly dependent on bamboo, including the red panda, bamboo lemurs found in Madagascar, and bamboo rats found in China and Southeast Asia.

*** Bamboo species usually reproduce by sending out shoots under the surface. Periodically, bamboo reproduces in a different way - by flowering, often over a wide area; producing seeds; and then dying. 2 - 3 years are generally required before new shoots appear from the seeds. Between 1974 and 1976, the umbrella bamboo, and other bamboo species that pandas depend on, flowered and died over large areas of the Min Mountains of northern Sichuan, China. As a result, at least 138 pandas died.

*** Although by the late 1980's a poacher could potentially receive the death penalty for killing a giant panda, the financial reward for selling a giant panda pelt was so high (more than an average peasant's lifetime earnings) that not even the death penalty was a deterrent: "Even though I risked my life, it was worth it," a poacher was quoted as saying to police. "If you hadn't caught me, I would have been rich."

*** In 1995, a Chinese farmer who shot and killed a giant panda and tried to sell its skin was sentenced to life imprisonment

*** "Pandas were much hunted by local people before 1949... In recent years, however, most people have been educated regarding the rarity and value of the panda; realizing now that it represents a national treasure, they help rather than kill it. When, for example, a sick adult panda went into a commune in October 1978, a family fed it on sugar cane and rice porridge until it left three days later."

History of Distribution:
The giant panda has been declining for thousands of years due to hunting by humans and climatic changes. Its populations originally extended throughout most of southern and eastern China, northern Myanmar, and northern Vietnam. In ancient China it was already considered rare. By 1900, it occurred only in one region: the Qinling Mountains and along the edge of the Tibetan plateau. Soon after 1900, the expansion of agriculture upstream along principal river valleys had separated this distribution into six separate regions, almost completely isolated from one another, in six mountain ranges: the Qinling, Min, Qionglai, Daxiangling, Xiaoxiangling, and Liang Mountains. Currently, the giant panda occurs in portions of these six mountain ranges in China's Gansu, Shaanxi and Sichuan Provinces. The panda's total range encompasses about 29,500 sq km (11,400 sq mi), but probably less than 20%, or 5900 sq km (2300 sq mi), represents panda habitat. Chinese research on the panda has revealed that reproduction in the wild is adequate and that the giant panda population has remained stable for 20 years.

The majority of the surviving (approximately 25) wild giant panda populations have fewer than 20 individuals. However, there appear to be no major reductions in the genetic diversity of these populations, although overall they have likely experienced modest genetic losses from a much larger ancestral population.

Results of a new four-year survey announced in 2004 indicated that China's wild giant panda population includes approximately 1600 animals, about 40% more than previous estimates. It is believed that the increase in the estimated population is due to more accurate and comprehensive survey methods rather than to an actual increase in the population. For example, 11 more counties were found to have pandas than in the previous survey in the 1980's.


Threats and Reasons for Decline:
The greatest threat to panda survival is the loss and degradation of its habitat. The giant panda's range is steadily shrinking as logging operations - many of them illegal - fell trees, and peasants clear land for farming or cut down vegetation for fuel. Already panda populations are small and isolated, confined to high ridges and hemmed in by cultivation.

Panda pelts can bring two to three times the average annual income of a rural Chinese peasant in some Asian markets, and poaching was a serious problem in the past. However, as a result of enforcement and education, poaching intensity has dropped off, and it is no longer considered a major problem in substantial portions of the range. Giant pandas are still killed as victims of poachers' snares set for musk deer. Pandas' body parts have not been sought for use in traditional Chinese medicine

An indirect threat from habitat fragmentation relates to the panda's reliance on bamboo for food. Bamboo stands are subject to periodic large-scale die-offs, but in the past, when bamboo died off, pandas could migrate to areas with healthy bamboo. With fragmented habitat, this may not be possible. Since pandas are solitary and shy, they generally will not go into human-populated areas. Cut off from these areas, the pandas have no recourse to alternative food supplies when die-offs occur.

Conservation:
A logging ban declared at the end of 1998 has put most panda habitat off-limits to commercial logging. Alternative forest uses that would be more ecologically friendly, such as commercial mushroom farming and ecotourism, are being evaluated.

Data on Biology and Ecology:
Size and Weight:
Length: 160 - 190 cm (63 - 75"); Weight - Females: 70 - 100 kg (154 - 220 lb), Males: 85 - 125 kg (187 - 275 lb).

Habitat:
The giant panda occurs in montane forests with dense stands of bamboo at altitudes of 2700 - 3900 m (8850 - 12,800'). It may descend to as low as 800 m (2600') during winter (usually not below 1200 - 1300 m (3900 - 4300') because of man's impact on its habitat) to reach warmer temperatures.

The giant panda is one of the species that live in both the Mountains of Southwest China Biodiversity Hotspot and the Central China Temperate Forests Global 200 Ecoregion.

Age to Maturity:
In the wild, pandas do not reach sexual maturity until they are at least 4.5 years old, and perhaps not until they are 7.5 years old. In captivity, both sexes usually reach maturity at the age of 5.5 or 6.5 years.

Gestation Period:
Gestation ranges from 97 - 181 days, with an average of about 135 days. Delayed implantation apparently takes place, varying from 1.5 - 4.0 months in duration.

Birth Season:
The mating season is mainly from mid-March to mid-May. During this period, females are only fertile for 2 - 7 days. Females without young may also come into heat in September-October and very rarely in January-February. Births usually occur during July-September (from the Spring matings).

Birth Rate:
The number of young per litter is usually 1 or 2, rarely 3. Average litter size is 1.7. A captive female raises only 1 young if more than one are born, although a wild female may on rare occasions attempt to rear two. (Several instances of a female accompanied by 2 young, both presumably her own, have been reported from the Min and Qionglai Mountains.) If her infant dies before it is 6 months old, a female may have young in consecutive years; if it survives, the birth interval is 2 years. (Schaller et al. 1985)

Early Development:
The newborn giant panda is highly altricial, weighing only 100 - 200 g (4 - 8 oz) and being only 15 - 17 cm (6 - 6.7") long. Its mother leaves it in the den (usually a rock cave or hollow base of a tree) for short periods during its first 4 - 6 weeks while she feeds and then starts carrying the young panda with her. A young panda becomes mobile at 5 - 6 months; it is weaned at about 46 weeks.

Dispersal:
A young giant panda becomes independent of its mother at 12 - 22 months after birth, usually about 18 months.

Maximum Age:
One animal lived to an age of about 34 years in captivity. The lifespan in the wild is unknown.

Diet:
The giant panda's diet consists mainly (over 99%) of bamboo shoots, up to 13 mm (1/2") in diameter, and bamboo roots. It also eats bulbs of plants such as iris and crocus, grasses and occasionally fish, insects, carrion, eggs and small rodents.

With a digestive system characteristic of a carnivore, the giant panda is very inefficient in digesting bamboo, utilizing an average of only 17 % of the dry matter. Therefore, adult pandas must eat 10 - 18 kg (22 - 40 lb) of bamboo per day to get enough nourishment.

Behavior:
The giant panda does not make a permanent den but takes shelter in hollow trees, rock crevices and caves. It spends 10 - 12 hours a day feeding. It is mainly terrestrial but can climb trees well. Activity is largely crepuscular and nocturnal. It does not hibernate but descends to lower elevations in the winter to reach warmer temperatures.

The giant panda has an enlarged, movable wrist bone that serves as an opposable "false thumb" to the normal five toes on its front paws. This bone is used to grasp bamboo stems while eating.

Social Organization:
Giant pandas are usually solitary, except during the mating season. Home ranges overlap extensively, with several pandas utilizing the same area. However each female has a core area within her range that only she uses, and this tends to reduce direct contact by spacing individuals.

Giant pandas have a polygynous or promiscuous mating system; males compete for access to more than one adult female.

Mortality and Survival:
Since a panda female may not produce her first offspring until the age of 7 years and probably raises only one young successfully every 3 years (a rate of 0.3 young per year), the population can sustain an annual total mortality rate no greater than about 8 % per year.

Density and Range:
Density of pandas within the 6000 sq km (2300 sq mi) of China's panda reserves averaged one animal per 9.3 - 10.7 sq km (3.6 - 4.1 sq mi). But if only suitable habitat was considered, then, for example, four of the reserves had densities of one animal per 3.3 - 3.8 sq km (1.3 - 1.5 sq mi), one per 2.3 sq km (0.9 sq mi), one per 6.0 - 8.0 sq km (2.3 - 3.1 sq mi) and one per 4.8 - 9.7 sq km (1.9 - 3.7 sq mi).

Adult male home ranges overlap those of a number of females, as well as those of adjacent males. Female ranges overlap each other to some extent but can have fairly exclusive, repeatedly used core ranges. The home ranges of male pandas lack discrete core areas, and male pandas move throughout their entire home ranges more frequently than do female pandas. Male home ranges tend to be somewhat larger than those of females. Home range sizes for females appear to vary in response to changing bamboo availability, while for males home range sizes are determined by the number and availability of reproductive females.

Schaller et al. calculated home range sizes for 3 females and 2 males. The home ranges varied from 3.9 - 6.4 sq km (1.5 - 2.5 sq mi). This was before the dominant bamboo flowered and died in 1983. After the dieback these home ranges increased to 6.6 - 9.8 sq km (2.5 - 3.8 sq mi) within a few years of the dieback. The home ranges of the females averaged 4.5 sq km (1.7 sq mi) and those of the males 6.1 sq km (2.4 sq mi). Female pandas tended to concentrate their activity in a certain part of their home range; i.e., core areas. Although total home range size was 3.9 - 6.4 sq km (1.5 - 2.5 sq mi), each female panda concentrated its activity in about 0.29 - 0.38 (mean 0.33) sq km (0.11 - 0.15 (mean 0.13) sq mi).

Information Credited to this Link  
PostPosted: Sat Apr 11, 2009 5:02 pm


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This Beautiful Picture was taken by Carterr off of Deviantart.com

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These two beautiful pictures were taken by VisionsofJellyfish off of Deviantart.com

Amur Leopard
Status: Critically endangered

Description: Also known as the Far Eastern leopard, the Manchurian leopard, or the Korean leopard.

Habitat Range:

They are found in the mountainous taiga forest and grasslands on the southern tip of the Russian Far East, sharing a border with China and Korea. Much of Amur Leopard's preferred remaining territory is now surrounded by farms and villages, making poaching easier.


Numbers Left in the Wild: 25-34



Primary Threats:

The Amur leopard's extremely low population levels could be catapulted into extinction by any of the following threats: Loss or destruction of habitat; due to logging and/or burning of the forest, poaching for their skins and body parts sold for use in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) trade, reduction in the leopard's natural prey due to illegal hunting, and human encroachment, for example, the development of a coal mine or an oil pipeline into the Amur leopard's habitat.


What we are doing to help:

~Our partners, Phoenix Fund, along with additional NGOs, convinced Russia and Transneft Corporation to relocate a proposed oil pipeline. The pipeline would have delivered oil from Siberia to the Pacific Ocean directly through the last remaining Amur leopard habitat.


~Phoenix Fund's fire-fighting team fights seasonal forest fires that have destroyed large areas of Amur leopard habitat, a huge threat to their already small population.


~The Inspection Tiger anti-poaching team patrols the last remaining Amur leopard reserve in the world; to preserve the last surviving Amur leopards.


Imformation Credited to this Link  

Kara Asumie
Captain

Nine-tailed Neko


Kara Asumie
Captain

Nine-tailed Neko

PostPosted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 1:36 pm


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These beautiful Pictures were taken by Sooper-Deviant off of Deviantart.com

Native to the Central Asian mountains, the snow leopard is a rare sight, with only about 6,000 left in the wild. They are hunted for their beautiful, warm fur and for their organs, which are used in traditional Chinese medicine.

Snow Leopard Profile:
These beautiful gray leopards live in the mountains of Central Asia. They are insulated by thick hair, and their wide, fur-covered feet act as natural snowshoes. These cats have powerful legs and are tremendous leapers, able to jump as far as 50 feet (15 meters). Snow leopards use their long tails for balance and as blankets to cover sensitive body parts against the severe mountain chill.

Snow leopards prey upon the blue sheep (bharal) of Tibet and the Himalayas, and mountain ibex found over most of the rest of their range. Though these powerful predators can kill animals three times their weight, they also eat smaller fare, such as marmots, hares, and game birds.

One Indian snow leopard, protected and observed in a national park, is reported to have consumed five blue sheep, nine Tibetan woolly hares, twenty-five marmots, five domestic goats, one domestic sheep, and fifteen birds in a single year.

As these numbers indicate, snow leopards sometimes have a taste for domestic animals, which has led to many deaths of the big cats at the hands of herders.

These endangered cats appear to be in dramatic decline because of such killings, and due to poaching driven by illegal trades in pelts and in body parts used for traditional Chinese medicine. Vanishing habitat and the decline of the cats' large mammal prey are also contributing factors.


Snow Leopard Fast Facts:
Type: Mammal
Diet: Carnivore
Size: 4 to 5 ft (1.2 to 1.5 m); Tail, 36 in (91 cm)
Weight: 60 to 120 lbs (27 to 54 kg)
Protection status: Endangered


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PostPosted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 7:58 pm


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This beautiful picture was Taken by Amethyst_Dragon off of Deviantart.com
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Przewalski's horse Profile:

Przewalski's horses are the last surviving subspecies of wild horse. First described scientifically in the late 19th century by Russian explorer N. M. Przewalski, for whom the horse is named, the horse once freely roamed the steppe along the Mongolia-China border. Never again seen in the wild, Przewalski’s horses have since been kept and bred in captivity and have recently been reintroduced in Mongolia.

With a short, muscular body, Przewalski’s horses are smaller than most domesticated horses. They have a pale belly and beige to reddish-brown coat that is short during summer and thicker and longer in winter. Their muzzle is white, and they don an erect and dark mane that lines their large head and neck. They stand about 12 to 14 hands tall at the shoulder, or about 48 to 56 inches (122 to 142 centimeters), and weigh about 440 to 750 pounds (200 to 340 kilograms).

While extant in the wild, these horses ate grasses and other vegetation on the steppe, shrublands, and plains of western Mongolia and northern China. Herds observed at reintroduction sites appear to be affectionate. Females, or mares, and foals live in family groups with a dominant stallion, while younger males live in bachelor groups. Mares give birth to a single foal after an 11- to 12-month pregnancy.

Considered a wild subspecies because its ancestors were never domesticated, the extinction in the wild of the Przewalski’s horse was due primarily to interbreeding with other domesticated horses. About 1,500 exist today, a large number living in zoos, but many also making up herds that have been reintroduced at several sites in Mongolia.

While their greatest threats today include a loss of genetic diversity, their extinction in the wild was also brought on by hunting, loss of habitat, and loss of water sources to domestic animals.

Przewalski's horse Fast Facts:
Type: Mammal
Diet: Omnivore
Average lifespan in captivity: About 20 years
Size: Height at the shoulders 48 to 56 in (122 to 142 cm)
Weight: 440 to 750 lbs (200 to 340 kg)
Group name: Herd
Protection status: Endangered


Information credited to this link  

Kara Asumie
Captain

Nine-tailed Neko


Kara Asumie
Captain

Nine-tailed Neko

PostPosted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 8:03 pm


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PostPosted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 9:21 pm


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Kara Asumie
Captain

Nine-tailed Neko


Kara Asumie
Captain

Nine-tailed Neko

PostPosted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 9:22 pm


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PostPosted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 9:27 pm


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Kara Asumie
Captain

Nine-tailed Neko


Kara Asumie
Captain

Nine-tailed Neko

PostPosted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 9:28 pm


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These beautiful pictures were taken by AngelicHell off of Deviantart.com aka Me  
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Spirit Pet Shop Endangered Animal Rescue

 
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